Welcome

What Would Dale Sr. Think?

Monday, June 16th, 2008 Write a comment

Not long after Dale Earnhardt Jr. won his first points race for Hendrick Motorsports at Michigan, I put in a call to one of my friends in High Places and asked a favor. I needed to talk to Dale Earnhardt Sr. and could he please put me in touch? Within a miraculous minute or two, the phone rang. It was Dale.

‘Dale,’ I said, ‘Thanks for calling. Did you see June Bug win that race at Michigan today driving for Hendrick Motorsports?’

There was a long pause. “Yeah, I saw it,” he said. Then you could almost see that big grin breaking out on his face. “Pretty darned good, wadn’t it? I was really proud of the way Junior and Tony Eury Jr. worked together to win it on fuel mileage. Kind of reminded me of beating Bill Elliott on the last lap at Darlington one year.”

‘But Dale,’ I said, ‘He left Dale Earnhardt Inc. and now he’s winning for Rick Hendrick, never one of your closest friends in the garage, especially back in the days when you used to hammer on Geoff Bodine.’

‘Yeah, well,” said Dale after another pause, “Whenever your son wins a race, it’s a big deal. It don’t matter who he’s driving for. A father has to be happy when a son wins a big race, especially one at Michigan on Father’s Day. Chevy really needed a win there and it will probably help sell some cars at Dale Earnhardt Chevrolet.”

‘Well jeez,’ I replied. ‘It’s not like I’m fishing for a controversial quote. I mean who’s going to believe me, anyway? It just doesn’t seem like you would cotton to the idea of Little E and his sister Kelly splitting from DEI to move to Hendrick. Pardon the expression, but as the Intimidator you’ve always been pretty black and white about such things.’

“I guess it looks like two choices,” said Dale. “But the way the situation is now, I don’t have to pick sides. I’m pulling for everybody to win, including DEI. I mean, how do you think I got admitted to this place up here, anyway?”

‘OK, OK, I get it,’ I said. ‘But you don’t mean you’re pulling for everybody literally. Jack Roush is still a peckerhead in your book, right?’

“Man,” said Dale, “You don’t get it. Once you’re up here, giving driving lessons to the Big Guy, the perspective changes. Things start rubbing off on you, and I’m not talking about fender and door paint. Some days, though, even He thinks He’s Dale Earnhardt and I have to straighten Him out about that.”

‘Speaking of getting things straight,’ I said, trying to regain the momentum, ‘Did you hear how Dale Jr. said he had you whupped at Michigan in the IROC race back in 2000 on the last lap until Rusty Wallace gave you a bump draft?’

Just then a bolt of lightning came out of nowhere and landed just outside the window to my office. Funny thing, though, it didn’t affect the phone connection.

“I had his ass whupped at the finish line, didn’t I?” thundered Dale.

‘I see,’ I said, now getting warmed up. ‘As long as you’re not on the track, everything’s OK, because you’re not getting beat. Is that it?’

“What makes you think I’m not out there?” said Dale. And once again I could sense that sly grin begin to uncurl at the corners of his mouth. “I mighta even been there the day my son Kerry won at Michigan in the ARCA race back in 2001, too.”

‘Well Dale,’ I said. ‘You’ve never failed to amaze me, so I guess anything’s possible, including this phone call.’ I decided to tuck into the draft at this point. ‘So what do you think about Little E winning this year’s championship?’

“I don’t like talking about the Chase, even though Bill France Jr. and I finally worked that out once he got up here. I think Dale Jr.’s got a good chance, if Hendrick can get its act together on the Car of Tomorrow. It looks like they’ve turned the corner. Jimmy Johnson had a pretty good race at Michigan. I think Dale Jr.’s really been carrying the car a lot up until now. You can’t win the championship on fuel mileage. But if they really catch up, maybe ol’ DW’s prediction of six race victories ain’t too bad.”

‘He’s already got three if you include the two prelims from Daytona,’ I said. ‘And four if you include Brad Keselowski’s first Nationwide win for JR Motorsports. How do you think Dale Jr.’s doing as a team owner?’

“He’s getting there, ain’t he?” said Dale. “I honestly think that comment Teresa made about him having to choose between being a celebrity and a race car driver got his attention. She prayed a lot about it beforehand, so I can’t fault her for that. It’s too bad the rest of it didn’t work out. But I really couldn’t see Dale Jr. running the team and the rest of the DEI stuff better than her at this point in his life. He’s better off sticking to driving.”

‘I see,’ I replied, this time really mystified. Was I really talking to my old friend Dale? Could he be this mellow? So I gave it one more try.

‘You probably saw where Dale Jarrett and Bill Elliott are hanging up their helmets. Sterling Marlin’s almost done. So I guess your career in NASCAR would be over about now. Otherwise, I’d ask you whether you could beat Junior to the championship if you were still driving for Richard Childress.’

“Well, I guess you already know who did the better job the last time we drove the same equipment, that Corvette in the Daytona 24-hour,” said Dale calmly, not missing a beat.

‘OK, OK,’ I replied, on the short end yet again in a conversation with the seven-time champion. ‘You got me there. Too bad you never had a chance to get your Corvette team together. I know how much you wanted to race at Le Mans. By the way, did you see the Le Mans race this weekend? Allan McNish was incredible when he ran that quadruple stint against the Peugeots at the start and put the Audi into the lead.’

“Did I see it?” said Dale. “I was right there on his shoulder.”

Jonathan can be reached at jonathan@jingrambooks.com.

 

 

 

Bye-Bye BP

Monday, January 22nd, 2007 Write a Comment

In the spring of 1984, I covered what turned out to be the final victory in the driving career of Benny Parsons. Prior to the race, I had a converstion with BP in the old garage area of the Atlanta track. As always, he was genial and forthright. Here follows the subsequent column that appeared in the April 23 issue of On Track Magazine that year. Following his death from cancer last week, Benny’s own words seem to me the most appropriate way to remember him.Two quotations from Benny Parsons sum up the paradox of the career of one of the most talented drivers in the NASCAR Grand National ranks, the man who won the March 18 Coca-Cola 500 at Atlanta International Raceway and claimed his first victory since September of 1981.

“If I win this race,” Parsons said while waiting for the final practice session to begin on Saturday, “it won’t make any difference in a thousand years. But the kind of person I am will make a difference.” This prevailing attitude which surrounds Parsons has given him the tag “too nice a guy,” a fellow not aggressive enough to put together a big season.

But then after his victory Parsons was asked about his supposed lack of aggressiveness on the race track. Was the 42-year-old, balding, mild-mannered veteran worried about scrapping for the lead just 18 laps from the finish with two drivers known for their unabandoned aggressiveness — Cale Yarborough and Dale Earnhardt? “If I get my shot, I’m going to take it,” he said, “and if I took it and they didn’t give it to me there was going to be a heckuva wreck.”

There was irony in the fact that Parsons, who led 228.5 miles of the 500-mile event, eventually outdueled both Yarborough and Earnhardt, despite the latter’s insistence on using “a whole lot of race track” after taking the lead on the day’s final caution. For three consecutive seasons, Parsons has had his ride taken out from under him and given to notorious leadfoots. Yarborough took over for Parsons in 1981 and on the M.C. Anderson team after Benny won three races for Anderson during the ‘80 season. Then Earnhardt took over for Parsons in ‘82 in the Bud Moore Ford after Benny won three races for Moore in ‘81.

The ultimate insult came during the 1982 season when he was fired in mid-season by Harry Ranier and replaced by Buddy Baker following a race at Talladega in which Parsons was judged not to be aggressive enough on the last lap as a member of the lead draft. (There was a bit of irony here, too, in that Baker was the polesitter at Atlanta but recorded a DNF.) Although the Ranier car was reported to be undergeared at Talladega during that race — and despite the fact Parsons became the first driver to qualify for a Winston Cup race at 200 mph by winning the pole for the race — Benny nevertheless was let go from the team that prides itself on being able to run strong on the big tracks.

“I’m not aggressive enough for some car owners,” he said with a shrug, “and I am aggressive enough for others.” In other words, the value and ability of Parsons as a race car driver is determined by the eye of the beholder. In Parsons’ case, the most beholden eye is his own.

Parsons has had a solid career, winning the Grand National championship in 1973 (although he won just one race that season) and 21 races in his career. But he never seems to have gotten the big breaks necessary to put him with a team and in equipment that would result in a big season. (Or maybe Benny just wasn’t aggressive enough off the track to make it happen. “You have be aggressive both places,” he agrees.)

Parsons’ current ride with the relatively modestly financed Johnny Hayes Copenhagen team is remarkably similar to his situation through most of his career. From the very outset of his career, nice guy Benny has been unseated from the big rides and then has made the most of it with a team of lesser finances. In 1963, for example, the Ford factory had one ride left on its factory team, and Parsons and Yarborough were selected to vie for the seat in a Grand National race at the Asheville-Weaverville half-mile track in North Carolina, driving factory-prepped Fords. Parsons, who had moved from his native North Carolina mountain home to Detroit (where he supported himself by driving a taxi) had been impressing the factory folks up north with his prowess on Midwestern short tracks.

“I think I led the race for a while,” recalls Yarborough, “and I finally went out with a bad radiator. But I ran good, ran up front, ran strong. And Benny had some problems. And so when it was all over, they said I had the job. It was a little bit cruel, wasn’t it, to bring two people down and say, ‘All right, one of you is going to be on the Ford Motor Co. racing team.’ I don’t know. If I had lost, it would have been cruel as hell, I’ll tell you that. I don’t know whether I’d be in the racing business now or not. I might be driving a tractor on a farm in South Carolina.”

Parsons, who says he owes his tenacity to his grandmother — “she raised three generations in the mountains with absolutely nothing” — responded to the cruel defeat by returning to the Midwestern short tracks. “The toughest things were those early years,” he recalls, “when I didn’t have any money and owed everybody; then I’d blow an engineer and wonder, ‘Should I quit?’”

Parsons eventually succeeded, winning the ARCA championships in 1968 and 1969 befoe joining the ranks of the Grand Nationals in 1970 with the L.G. DeWitt team. Although not as well financed as some of its competitors, the team won 12 races in nine years with Parsons as the driver. In 1973 the team won the Grand National championship by finishing consistently (and by rebuilding Parsons’ wrecked car during the final race of the season at Rockingham, down the road apiece from Benny’s home in Ellerbe). In a way, that 1973 championship is the hallmark of Parsons’ style. Easy on equipment, he drives the first 400 miles, then races for the final 100 — a style developed in the early days when he was concerned about saving his equipment since he had no budget. It was also a style championed by Richard Petty and David Pearson, among others, and one that was dictated by the poor financial condition of Grand National racing at that time.

Yet the image persists in Parsons’ case that he is not aggressive enough and just too nice a guy, despite some evidence to the contrary. Another memorable race by Parsons that took place not far from Ellerbe — where Parsons is known for his annual Christmas charity for the area’s indigent children — was his World 600 victory at Charlotte in 1980. There Darrell Waltrip almost ran Parsons off the track three laps from the finish. “I passed him on the inside,” Parsons told reporters in the press box afterward, “and he almost ran me into the grass. I felt like it was my last shot and I had to keep going.”

Parsons, then, will take what he believes is rightfully his on a race track, but he will never endanger himself or another driver by trying to bluff his way or muscle his way into victory lane by driving his car like a raging bull. He is too concerned about his fellow man and his own human role. And if that’s being too nice a guy, so be it. “No matter what else happens in this racing business,” he says, “when I’m through, no one can say Benny Parsons was a jackass.”

 

(Jonathan Ingram can be reached at jingram666@cs.com.)

From Toyota to Montoya, It’s Going To Be A Unique Year

Monday, January 15th, 2007 Write a Comment

1. The Japanese Have Arrived

See the Toyota Camry at Daytona. See the Toyota Camry teams qualify, maybe. See the Toyota Camry eventually win a race. See Toyota win sooner and more often than Dodge when it made a comeback in 2001? Maybe.

2. The Car of Tomorrow Lands At Bristol

NASCAR has bet its future on a safer car that supposedly races better and holds down cost. It ostensibly should make rule-making easier as well. The key phrase: “NASCAR has bet its future… .”

3. Will The Chase Be Better With More Drivers?

The plan is to add drivers to the Chase, probably two. It remains to be seen if race winners get a bump in the points compared to the present system. Look for the championship name to include Sprint, parent company of Nextel.

4. Montoya Makes His Move

For many years, there’s been a sub rosa debate over whether Indy Car, Formula 1 or NASCAR drivers are better. Juan Montoya, a former Indy 500 winner and F1 race winner, may yet answer the question this season while driving for Chip Ganassi.

5. The TV Ratings And Attendance

Audiences went down in these two crucial categories in 2006. Theories abound as to why. One year does not make a pattern, but two straight years of declines would constitute a troublesome trend.

6. Will Dale Jr. Return to DEI In 2008?

Maybe the stepson, who happens to be NASCAR’s most popular driver four years running, and the stepmother, who runs the legacy team of “The Intimidator,” can sort out a new contract early this season. In any event, Dale Earnhardt Jr. can survive on his own far better than Dale Earnhardt Inc. can get along without him due to his talent, desire and popularity.

7. Will the legacy teams score more than 7 victories?

Richard Childress Racing bounced back with six victories in 2006 and two Chase contenders. Earnhardt Jr. scored one win with DEI. Left out in the cold: Robert Yates Racing, Petty Enterprises and the Wood Brothers, although all three managed to make the top 35 in owner points with each of their regular entries.

8. Busch Series To Continue As Major Minor League

NASCAR is hoping the Car of Tomorrow will eventualy diminish what amounts to tire testing in the Busch Series by Cup teams and drivers, which win all the races. In the short term, Cup teams will continue to have their younger drivers compete in all the Busch Series events that coincide with Cup races.

9. Does The Chase Always Produce A New Champ?

It was tough enough to produce back-to-back titles under the Latford points system, but Richard Petty and Dale Earnhardt each did it three times. Cale Yarborough won three straight Winston Cups. The last driver to repeat was Jeff Gordon in 1997-98. This year, Jimmie Johnson has a chance to be the first back-to-back winner under the Chase format.

10. Who can beat Hendrick, Gibbs or Roush?

You have to go back to 1999, when Dale Jarrett clinched the championship for Robert Yates Racing, to find a title winner who didn’t belong to Hendrick Motorsports, Roush Racing or Joe Gibbs Racing.

Likely contenders to beat the big three: Ray Evernham Motorsports or Richard Childress Racing.

(Jonathan Ingram is in his 31st year of writing about NASCAR. He can be reached at jingram666@cs.com.)